Shouldn’t we want people to be as moral as possible?

Saturday, April 6th, 2019

The notion of moral zealotry as a vice is somewhat puzzling:

Shouldn’t we want people to be as moral as possible? Republican Presidential hopeful Barry Goldwater is often quoted as saying, “Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice; moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.” That’s true of idealized people who have perfect knowledge of justice and how best to pursue it, and whose commitment to goodness is untainted by less saintly motives. The rest of us are at risk of having our minds hijacked by intense, but not necessarily reflective, moral passions.

People so hijacked are moral zealots. A paradigmatic example is early twentieth century anti-alcohol crusader Carrie A. Nation. Believing that God wanted her to personally vanquish alcohol from the land, she attacked Kansas saloons with rocks and, emblematically, hatchets (affectionately named “faith,” “hope” and “charity”) in rampages she called “Hatchetations.” Kansas was an early adopter of prohibition, but the law was being widely ignored. Nation saw herself as a vigilante enforcer of the law. Saloon owners and patrons stood agog as she plied her instruments of God’s will on barrels of liquor and bar fixtures, thundering Biblical exhortations. As her reputation spread, saloons put up signs saying, “All Nations are Welcome Except Carrie.”

Nation was no mere hater of merriment. She had good reason to believe that alcohol was harmful. Her first husband had died of alcoholism at the age of 29, leaving her alone to raise a sickly child. Through her involvement in the temperance movement, she heard the testimonies of women whose husbands became abusive drunks and wastrels. Saloons were also associated with gambling and extramarital sex—at a time when syphilis was incurable and childbirth quite hazardous. Her hatred of saloons is understandable, even somewhat admirable, in light of these facts. Her sanctimonious vandalism was nonetheless wrong. Her moral passions blinded her to the fact that some of her means were inappropriate.

Moral zealotry is a social phenomenon. Nation probably wouldn’t have reached this degree of radicalism without her proximity to like-minded women (one suspects she didn’t have much exposure to responsible men who drank a moderate amount). In the 2008 movie, The Dark Knight, Alfred describes the Joker’s nihilistic motives: “Some people just want to watch the world burn.” Most people are not like this. For that reason, even the most reprehensible ideologies must appeal to the moral passions of potential converts. A few people want to watch the world burn; many more can be persuaded to put it through the refiner’s fire in order to make it better.

Shooting did not bother the skulking prowlers

Saturday, April 6th, 2019

In Egypt, every outfit more-or-less guarded its own area and shops, Dunlap explains — not against the Axis, but against the Arabs:

At that they did dismantle and steal a disabled Grant tank once. A Wog could and would steal anything he could lift or get a camel to carry. Tires and food were worth their weight in money in the Egyptian markets, so they were constantly watched. Shooting did not bother the skulking prowlers at all, unless the bullet connected.

Provide room for a long ogive

Friday, April 5th, 2019

Anthony Williams explains the importance of bullet shape:

A very basic refresher: the rate at which a bullet slows down in the air is determined by the ballistic coefficient; the higher the BC, the lower the velocity loss and the further the bullet will fly. That is, “other things being equal” — always an important qualification because there are so many variables. The BC is calculated from two other numbers, the sectional density (SD) and the form factor (FF). The SD is simple to calculate as it measures the bullet weight compared with the calibre; a 100 grain 30 cal bullet will have half the SD of a 200 grain 30 cal. The higher the SD, the better for long-range performance. The FF measures the shape of the bullet; it is not simple to calculate and its effect varies with velocity, but at a basic level it’s really common sense — a bullet with a long pointed nose, or ogive, is likely to have a better FF than one with a blunt ogive, especially at supersonic velocities. It’s the FF that I want to talk about.

I looked around for examples of bullets which are as alike as possible except in their shape in order to illustrate the importance of the FF, and found the two .50 cal bullets from Barnes Bullets shown on the screen. They are both made from solid brass to the same standards and both weigh the same — 750 grains. Barnes helpfully provides the BCs for this pair, so it’s a simple matter to feed the data into a standard ballistic calculator in order to work out the effect of the different shape. The results of this are interesting.

Barnes .50-Caliber Bullets

There are various ways of assessing the effective range of ammunition, one of them being the impact energy of the bullet on the target. The long bullet shown here has the same impact energy at 2,000 metres as the shorter bullet has at just over 1,400 metres. By this measure, that amounts to a 40% increase in effective range from using the long bullet rather than the shorter one — and it’s free! No extra ammunition weight, no extra recoil. The catch is, of course that the shorter bullet has been designed to keep within the official maximum overall length of the .50 Browning cartridge, so that the ammunition can be loaded into magazines and will function in gun actions; loaded with the long bullet, the cartridge can only be used in specialised single-shot rifles.

This problem of a short cartridge overall length, which prevents the most efficient, low-drag bullets being used, applies to at least some degree to all NATO rifle and machine gun ammunition. The long-range performance of all of these rounds is inherently limited by their inability to use such bullets. Their bullets all have quite short ogives which results in poor FFs and therefore poor BCs. The only way to improve the BC of bullets for these rounds is to use heavier bullets to increase the SD, but that puts up ammunition weight and recoil and results in a lower muzzle velocity and steeper trajectory.

NATO Small Arms Ammunition

The .338 Lapua Magnum has become the international standard long-range sniping round, but it was designed for bullets of up to 250 grains and doesn’t allow enough space for well-shaped versions of the 300 grain bullets which are becoming increasingly popular. It is interesting that General Dynamics selected the relatively obscure .338 Norma Magnum for their Lightweight Medium Machine Gun. I have heard various reasons why they chose the Norma round but one is incontrovertible; the shorter Norma case permits the use of bullets with a longer ogive, giving it the potential for a superior long-range performance.

The next slide is where things get really interesting. The standard 7.62mm NATO cartridge and its M80 bullet are shown at the top. The other pair illustrate one of my favourite examples of the merits of unconventional thinking. The Voss bullet was designed by a German ballistician, Dr Gunther Voss, in the early 1950s, when he was working for the Spanish CETME organisation. He wanted to develop a cartridge which combined a long range with a recoil light enough to permit controllable automatic rifle fire. He reasoned that for the recoil to be kept low, the bullet would have to be as light as possible, but as that would give it a poor sectional density, to achieve a long range would require giving it the best possible form factor. So his bullet is made of solid aluminium with a copper jacket over most of its length. It actually weighs 106.5 grains, which is less than the stumpy little .30 Carbine bullet, but the shape is so good that the BC is only a little lower than the 7.62 M80 which weighs 147 grains. Because the bullet is so light, it doesn’t need much propellant to drive it at a velocity comparable with the 7.62, so it uses a smaller cartridge case, saving yet more weight and further reducing recoil.

Bullet Design M80 versus Voss

By the few accounts I’ve found, Voss’s CETME round did what it was designed to do. In effect, it provided 7.62 NATO performance in a package that was similar in weight and recoil to the short 7.62mm Kalashnikov round. One potential drawback was lack of penetration, but it was claimed to be able to penetrate a contemporary steel helmet at 1,100 metres. I suspect that it might not have done so well against thicknesses of material, such as timber. Unfortunately for Voss, by the time it was ready to roll it was 1953 and the 7.62 NATO round had an unstoppable momentum, flattening all rivals in its path. The irony is that the US Army had wanted a long-range, .30-calibre cartridge with a recoil light enough for controllable automatic fire in a light rifle. The Voss design came very much closer to delivering that than did the 7.62 NATO, purely because of the superb shape of the bullet.

In the early 1970s something very similar was tried by the US Army with the 5.56mm FABRL, shown alongside the contemporary 5.56mm M193. FABRL originally stood for Frankford Arsenal and the Ballistic Research Laboratory, but it was later given the sexier meaning of Future Ammunition for Burst Rifle Launch. The aim was to reduce the recoil of the contemporary 5.56mm ammunition to make the rifles more controllable in burst fire. To achieve this the bullet weight was reduced from 55 to 37 grains by making it from steel with a plastic core, yet the much improved FF meant that the BC remained the same. Little more than half the propellant was needed to match the muzzle velocity of the M193 so the cartridge case could be shortened to leave room for the long bullet, and the chamber pressure was so low (39,000 psi instead of 52,000) that the use of an aluminium case became feasible, leading to an overall reduction in cartridge weight of 50%. The trajectory remained the same, but the recoil impulse was reduced by 35% (equivalent to a reduction in free recoil energy of over 60%).

Bullet Design M193 versus FABRL

The lesson to draw from this is not that all bullets should be made of aluminium or plastic — the two I’ve shown are clearly extreme examples — but that a well-shaped bullet gives you options you don’t have with a typical NATO bullet shape. You can keep the bullet weight the same, and enjoy an improved long-range performance; or if you don’t need to extend the range, you can reduce the bullet weight while still keeping the same BC as the NATO bullet, thereby reducing cartridge weight. If you reduce the bullet weight, you have another choice: you can leave the propellant load and cartridge case the same, and enjoy a higher muzzle velocity and flatter trajectory; or you can keep the MV the same and reduce the propellant load and size of the cartridge case, as in both examples I’ve described, gaining further reductions in recoil and ammunition weight. These are all great choices to have, but you only get them if you adopt a very well-shaped bullet, which means that the cartridge specification has to provide room for using bullets with a long ogive.

In case you didn’t already know — or didn’t deduce it from context — an ogive is a roundly tapered end, like the “point” of a bullet:

In ballistics or aerodynamics, an ogive is a pointed, curved surface mainly used to form the approximately streamlined nose of a bullet or other projectile, reducing air resistance or the drag of air. In fact the French word ogive can be translated as “nose cone” or “warhead”.

The traditional or secant ogive is a surface of revolution of the same curve that forms a Gothic arch; that is, a circular arc, of greater radius than the diameter of the cylindrical section (“shank”), is drawn from the edge of the shank until it intercepts the axis.

If this arc is drawn so that it meets the shank at zero angle (that is, the distance of the centre of the arc from the axis, plus the radius of the shank, equals the radius of the arc), then it is called a tangent or spitzer ogive. This is a very common ogive for high velocity (supersonic) rifle bullets.

The sharpness of this ogive is expressed by the ratio of its radius to the diameter of the cylinder; a value of one half being a hemispherical dome, and larger values being progressively more pointed. Values of 4 to 10 are commonly used in rifles, with 6 being the most common.

Another common ogive for bullets is the elliptical ogive. This is a curve very similar to the spitzer ogive, except that the circular arc is replaced by an ellipse defined in such a way that it meets the axis at exactly 90°. This gives a somewhat rounded nose regardless of the sharpness ratio. An elliptical ogive is normally described in terms of the ratio of the length of the ogive to the diameter of the shank. A ratio of one half would be, once again, a hemisphere. Values close to 1 are common in practice. Elliptical ogives are mainly used in pistol bullets.

Missiles and aircraft generally have much more complex ogives, such as the von Kármán ogive.

Everything happens in Egypt

Friday, April 5th, 2019

Dunlap managed to fit in some rifle practice in Egypt:

Three hundred meter matches were lined up, so we practiced at 300 yards on standard British short range targets most of the time. The scoring rings are fairly close to those of our “A” target, but that is all. This is the camouflage target—top half a dull blue, bottom sand color; top half of bull is black, bottom, gray. It symbolizes a man looking over a skyline; the black is his head, in helmet, the gray his face, the blue the sky, the sand or buff color the earth. You go gradually blind looking at it; or rather, for the bull. I have to admit it is a more practical paper mark than our black and white job, but it is not nearly as much fun to shoot at! That little half-moon of black is hard to see even in bright light. Paradoxically, twice at Abassyia we had to hold up shooting until a dense fog cleared. Everything happens in Egypt.

Once we shot on 300-meter targets, at 300 meters, and on one string of six shots I set myself a high score of 56 out of 60. This is impossible, as the gun, ammunition and holding were not that good. One of those freak groups which pop up every once in awhile. Four consecutive strings like that would break the world record by 14 points, or maybe it is 17.

It’s rare to see joint as well as bone growth

Thursday, April 4th, 2019

Having previously regenerated bone in mice using the BMP2 protein, scientists then added BMP9:

When using the combination on mice with amputated toes, over 60 percent of the stump bones formed a layer of cartilage within three days. Without the proteins, the amputated toes would’ve healed over as normal.

That cartilage is a key part of joints, and shows definite progress in limb regeneration. Even in animals who can naturally regrow lost limbs, it’s rare to see joint as well as bone growth.

“These studies provide evidence that treatment of growth factors can be used to engineer a regeneration response from a non-regenerating amputation wound,” explain the researchers in their paper.

The results of the study showed that the regeneration process was most advanced when BMP2 was applied first, with BMP9 added a week after – in this case it led to the growth of more complete joint structures, even with some connections to the bone.

They are by no means jungle savages

Thursday, April 4th, 2019

The war brought all kinds of people together, Dunlap explains:

Sudanese are rated higher than the paler Arabic Egyptian by the Europeans in the Near East, and they are popular as waiters and general servants. As a people they are much cleaner and less diseased, and are a prouder race. Some have become wealthy business men in the cities. They are by no means jungle savages. The British respect them highly and rate them almost on a par with the Ghurka as fighting men. As Kipling wrote of “Fuzzy-Wuzzy,” he was the only man who ever “broke a British Square.” His hair is not so kinky and he does not wear it in the fuzzy-head fashion any more. The English have educated them as best they could and all except the back-country boys could read and write Arabic. One young fellow came up to me with an English-language newspaper once to ask the meaning of the word “counter-attack” — he was reading the news to the rest of his gang. Turned out he could read, write and speak Arabic, French and English, but had trouble with the English.

I do not know if their national sport is still killing lions with spears but they know how to handle rifles. Both the Arabs and the Sudanese seemed to understand weapons very well. We used to call one of them over every once in awhile and give him a gun of some sort to look over while we looked him over. I remember once an M1 rifle came through somehow and we let some of the natives see it. One of them snapped back the operating handle, looked in the chamber and receiver, worked the safety a couple of times, asked what the gas cylinder was and handed it back. He knew how it worked, that was all. No awe, no surprise, no nothin’, except he would like it a little lighter; so would I.

When a batch of American Negro soldiers came through I brought several down to the warehouse to pick up their rations and witness their reaction to the Sudanese and vice versa. The Americans went pop-eyed at the rather sinister-looking boys and definitely disclaimed all relationship on their part. As one of them put it, “They may belong to mah race, but thazzall! I ain’t like them!” One of the Sudanese came to me and asked how come. I told him in Arabic that they were Americans whose ancestors had been Africans. He said “Why?” That being involved, I forcefully requested him to start throwing the Spam on the truck.

The C.L.T. has gone from concept to killer relatively quickly

Wednesday, April 3rd, 2019

Precision glide bombs are not a new technology, so the success of precision weapons in the first Gulf War should have led to a new generation much sooner than just a decade ago:

The C.L.T. has gone from concept to killer relatively quickly by defense industry standards. Developed in 2009 as a joint project between Special Operations Command and Systima Technologies, its first use in combat was in November 2010, according to Lt. Phillip Chitty, a spokesman for Special Operations Command. Chitty declined to provide additional details of that airstrike, saying that “the location and scenario are classified.” Systima Technologies did not respond to numerous requests for comment.

The types of weapons the Pentagon has tested with the launch tube offer some insight into how Special Operations forces plan to fight in the future. In interviews with The Times, military officials said they placed a premium on long-range silent weapons with smaller explosive warheads over traditional airdropped bombs. By removing solid rocket motors and adding aerofoil wings to produce lift, these “glide bombs” use gravity to reach their targets without making any noise. Contracting documents reviewed by The Times indicate that Special Operations Command required one such munition to weigh approximately 50 pounds, take no more than one minute to reach targets four nautical miles away, hit moving targets traveling up to 70 miles per hour and either burst in the air above the target or from contact with the target. According to those documents, only one weapon currently meets those requirements: the GBU-69 Small Glide Munition, made by Dynetics and dropped solely from C.L.T.s. This 60-pound glide bomb, which can be GPS-guided for stationary targets and laser-guided for moving targets, is a marked departure from weapons like the Hellfire missile.

Nearly two decades of nonstop combat has revealed the limitations of weapons like the Hellfire, which was originally designed to destroy tanks. Even though Hellfire’s warhead has been redesigned for use against combatants, when fired the missile still produces a sound that pilots say can tip off people on the ground, prompting them to flee. By contrast, the Small Glide Munition reportedly makes far less noise than a Hellfire missile. Dynetics says its range exceeds 20 nautical miles, which could allow for a gunship to drop the bomb far enough away that people on the ground would not even see or hear the plane. In June 2018, Dynetics received a $470 million “indefinite quantity” contract to supply Special Operations Command with GBU-69s. A spokeswoman said that Special Operations Command has ordered more than 2,000 so far.

Special Operations Command has also been firing a small guided missile called Griffin from its dispensers. It is similar to the Hellfire missile in design and function, but is only two-thirds as long, weighs two-thirds less and has a similarly sized warhead.

In its development of new munitions like the GBU-69, the military has also come up with new ways to launch them. As the war in Iraq ground on, the Marine Corps decided in 2008 to arm its KC-130J Hercules refueling aircraft and turn them into close air support gunships. The resulting program, the Hercules Airborne Weapons Kit, added Hellfire missiles under the wings and two rows of five C.L.T.s strapped to the planes’ cargo ramp. By 2012, the Navy refitted the left-side passenger door toward the rear of these cargo planes with pressure-sealed fittings that allowed crewmen to load two launch tubes inside the plane side by side and drop them through the bottom of the door. The Navy called this the “Derringer Door” after the double-barreled pocket pistol designed for easy concealability. In a further evolution, Air Force AC-130 gunships now have a modified tail ramp with similar pressure-sealed fittings that allow up to 10 tube-launched weapons to be dropped before reloading.

I have to think you could modify mortar bombs in a similar way. Perhaps the mortar would have to be spigot mortar to better accommodate the wings. The Russians are already fielding suppressed mortars, by the way.

Skillfully alternating largess and spreading out surpluses

Wednesday, April 3rd, 2019

Dunlap’s QM job, working on the fruit delivery truck, turned into a gravy chain:

I usually had a good extra supply, which of course became the highest grade of trading stock. I was the mess sergeant’s friend, “The Man With The Stuff.” Steaks, pies, etc., came my way as long as I had a couple of extra crates of oranges to put out to whatever cook or mess sergeant was in line for promotion or just wanted to take good care of his boys. By skillfully alternating my largess and spreading out the surpluses everyone was happy and convinced he was doing better than the next outfit, so I did OK. Even after I lost the job I was welcome at most of the mess halls at any time, which is a record of some kind, mess sergeants being notoriously unfriendly to everybody below the rank of full colonel between meals.

Assessments go up in peacetime and down in combat

Tuesday, April 2nd, 2019

Anthony Williams notes that there appears to be a strong reliance on 5.56 mm weapons among modern militaries choosing their next-generation small arms:

I understand that these decisions have been based on assessments of the effective range of the 5.56 weapons. I have to say that I am wary of such analyses because I have observed a repeating pattern over the years: assessments of the effective range of 5.56 weapons go up in peacetime and down in combat.

Why is this? I suspect that it is because what is mainly studied in peacetime is the probability of incapacitation, which is (loosely) a combination of the hit probability and the wounding capability, compared with the weight of ammunition. As with the related concept of “stowed kills”, the outcomes tend to favour lighter ammunition. The problem is that this takes no account of other aspects of performance, especially barrier destruction and suppression — in both of which the 7.62 greatly outperforms the 5.56. Emeric Daniau of the DGA has been researching suppression by small arms fire, analysing published studies to devise a formula which fits with the reported results. One conclusion from this is that the suppressive effect of any given weight of 7.62 ammunition is substantially higher than that of the same weight of 5.56 ammunition at any range, despite the 7.62 weighing twice as much per round.

There were more useless high-ranking officers in Egypt than in England

Tuesday, April 2nd, 2019

There were more useless high-ranking officers in Egypt than in England, Dunlap thought, in 1943:

When we were working, we had to clean up the shop and get everything in order for one of these fast-walk inspections, taking at least two hours’ time and knocking about a half day’s work out of production. We really hated that, and for a couple of days after one of those exhibitions no one felt like working, feeling that there was really no point in extending ourselves if the officers could waste our time.

That management lesson might apply more generally.

When a man’s partner is killed he’s supposed to do something about it

Monday, April 1st, 2019

I read Neovictorian’s Sanity a couple months ago and noted that the afterword explicitly mentioned some of his favorite authors, starting with Dashiell Hammett. I had been meaning to read some Hammett for years, so I swung by Amazon and found that The Maltese Falcon was just $4.00 on Kindle.

The story is better known for the Bogart film, which brings up the biggest difference between the book and the movie: the character of Sam Spade looks absolutely nothing like Bogart. Early in the book he’s described as looking “rather pleasantly like a blond satan,” and a bit later, well, I’ll let Hammett describe him:

The smooth thickness of his arms, legs, and body, the sag of his big rounded shoulders, made his body like a bear’s. It was like a shaved bear’s: his chest was hairless. His skin was childishly soft and pink.

That seems more like Stacy Keach as Mike Hammer.

I remember watching bits of the Bogart film as a child, and my dad commenting that the gangsters didn’t seem especially fierce. Years later, a friend of mine who was into hardboiled detective fiction and film noir pointed out that the Code prevented the movie from accurately portraying many of the villains as gay. In the book, Spade’s receptionist describes his visitor as “queer,” which I would’ve taken to simply mean odd, if I hadn’t been forewarned, and later in the story that same character is referred to as a “fairy.” Another member of the gang, generally called “the boy,” is also called a “gunsel,” which can rather ambiguously refer to a criminal with a gun or a catamite. This suggests that their corpulent boss might also have had unusual tastes.

Anyway, Sam Spade drinks a distracting amount — Bacardi in a wine glass, Manhattan in a paper cup, etc.

Something that caught my attention early on is the murder weapon: a Webley-Fosbery Automatic Revolver. Another character has a Luger in a shoulder holster. The gunsel has two automatic pistols in his coat pockets. That’s one of the few times I would recommend (non-automatic) revolvers.

The first few pages of the story didn’t strike me as stereotypically hardboiled, but by the end it had the patter I expected:

“I’m going to send you over. The chances are you’ll get off with life. That means you’ll be out again in twenty years. You’re an angel. I’ll wait for you.” He cleared his throat. “If they hang you I’ll always remember you.”

“But—but, Sam, you can’t! Not after what we’ve been to each other. You can’t—”

“Like hell I can’t.”

[...]

When a man’s partner is killed he’s supposed to do something about it. It doesn’t make any difference what you thought of him. He was your partner and you’re supposed to do something about it. Then it happens we were in the detective business. Well, when one of your organization gets killed it’s bad business to let the killer get away with it. It’s bad all around—bad for that one organization, bad for every detective everywhere. Third, I’m a detective and expecting me to run criminals down and then let them go free is like asking a dog to catch a rabbit and let it go. It can be done, all right, and sometimes it is done, but it’s not the natural thing.

[...]

Don’t be too sure I’m as crooked as I’m supposed to be. That kind of reputation might be good business—bringing in high-priced jobs and making it easier to deal with the enemy.”

It’s a quick, fun read.

Every Englishman had a machine gun

Monday, April 1st, 2019

Do not laugh at anything the British do or did concerning military rifles since the Boer War, Dunlap advises, because they very carefully studied and experimented and trained harder with rifles than any other nation in the world:

By 1914 the regular British infantry were the hottest riflemen in any army, constantly practicing and competing. The regulation course of rapid fire called for 15 shots per minute on a camouflaged target, but the higher ranking shots qualified at 25 shots a minute and could keep most of them where they aimed them. That is bolt handling.

[...]

What the British regular army did to the Kaiser’s boys in World War I is history. The Germans tried to go through the “Contemptibles” just once, and then reported to headquarters that every Englishman had a machine gun.

The English had developed a better cartridge by then:

Before that war England went accuracy-happy and designed their 1914 rifle, a true Mauser type, for a magnum 7mm or .276 caliber, to reach the then-high velocity of 2,900 FPS, evidently being influenced by the success of the .280 Ross cartridge which held all long-range records of the time. The war started while the new rifle was under field test, and of course they did not want to change calibers with the pressure of a war on, and the rifles were made in both England and the U. S. in .303 caliber Mk VII, and later, for the U. S. in .30-06, as our Model 1917. The development of the machine gun for infantry firepower in France reduced the rifle to a less important role, and the fast 10-shot Lee-Enfield was found completely adequate for trench warfare so the .276 caliber was shelved permanently and no more Pattern ‘14 rifles made after 1918 in either England or the U. S.